Where is the Party I Used to Know

Where is the Party I Used to Know

I have been asked by a number of people if I could post my recent article from The New Zealand Herald. I do so in the hope that it might generate meaningful discussions from all sides. Kō ngā tahu ā ō tapuwae inanahi hei tauira ōra mō āpōpō. The footsteps we lay down in our past create the paving stones where we stand today. If we don't listen and learn those important lessons will pass us by. But we also need accountability to ensure those lessons are meaningful. 'Saving Lives' was only half the equation. We needed to 'Save Livelihoods' as well. Here is the article.

The stars aligned for me this week.

I have been wondering for some time now what happened to the Labour Party that I have supported all my life. I am 72, which means I was voting Labour before the current Prime Minister, Jacinda Adern, was even born.?

When she was elevated to the top job, I travelled the world bathing in the glow of her international reputation.?Her initial response to the Covid pandemic was the envy of the world. Reasoned, compassionate and effective.?

That was the message so many of her supporters, me included, proudly shared with our international colleagues who marvelled at what was happening in our small corner of the world.?My answer to them was simple - the world needs more leaders like ours.

But somewhere things changed and I wondered where it had all gone wrong.?

Last week four events coincided that helped answer that question for me.

The announcement of the Royal Commission on Covid; Willie Jackson’s ‘train wreck’ interview with Jack Tame on the merger of RNZ and TVNZ, the Three Waters constitutional ‘mistake’ and the Prime Minister featuring on the front page of the New Zealand Women’s Weekly.

I have no idea who is advising the Prime Minister at the moment, but surely that article, on sale in Supermarkets across the country where ordinary kiwis come face to face with the cost of living crisis every week, was as tone deaf?as it possibly could have been.?The pictures of the Prime Minister accompanying the article clearly demonstrated that the?crisis was not something that was at the forefront in the thinking of whoever approved those pictures.?

Under other circumstances the pictures might have been viewed as aspirational, but in the context of the very real cost of living crisis, they simply flew in the face of the thousands of kiwi parents who are struggling every week to find ways to simply clothe and feed their children. Having access to the designer clothes the Prime Minister featured in the article must have seemed like some far off fantasy land where the cost of living was never an issue.?

Perhaps the only saving grace is that buying the magazine was probably not high on the list of priorities when it came to where their limited resources needed to be spent.?But it wasn’t just the pictures.?

In the article the Prime Minister extolled the importance of being together as a family - especially in challenging times.?

Well times didn’t get more challenging than they did at the height of the Covid pandemic, so imagine how those hundred of thousands of kiwi citizens who found themselves locked out of their country by a totally unfit for purpose MIQ system, felt seeing the PM finally acknowledging that being together as a family was important.

Being there when a loved one was dying. Being there for the birth of your child. Being there because you were now an illegal overstayer holed up in a foreign country with no money and no way to earn it.?The stories that were shared with me during my fruitless attempts to engage with the Prime Ministers Office over ways we could use new technologies to start bringing our fellow kiwis home, safely, will remain with me forever.?

Stories like the father who didn’t meet his son until he was two years old. Stories like the son who had tested negative on his final test in MIQ ( his 3rd negative) but wasn’t allowed to leave a day early to be at his terminally ill fathers bedside.?There would have been thousands of people reading the Women’s Weekly with similar stories.?

Then there were those whose health was placed at risk because of a one size fits all lock down of hospital. 35,000 women placed at risk of breast cancer is just one of the numbers that are overlooked by those who argue - ‘but look how many lives we saved!’.?

We will be measuring the costs long after todays politicians are retired on their tax payer funded superannuation schemes.?

Which brings me to the Royal Commission on Covid.?The convenient statement that it will not be looking to blame anyone begs the question, why not?

That’s called accountability and there is nothing to prevent that accountability being measured by the circumstances under which decisions were made. Everyone accepts that these were challenging times where decision had to be made fast. But that should not be a blanket to protect incompetence or an unwillingness to adapt as circumstances changed.?

One question for the Royal Commission to ask is - what happened during the 16 month period between the first lockdown, which we all accept was the right thing to do, and the second one that saw Aucklanders having to carry the burden of a multi million dollar economic impact under Level 4 lockdown conditions that were identical to the ones put in place a year and a half earlier??Had we learned nothing at all during that time? ?

It appears we hadn’t. Instead we sat on our laurels. Bathed in the afterglow of the praise being heaped on us from around the world, and then watched as the world sailed by.?There are other questions that the Royal Commission needs to be asking as well.?

Like, why did the government persist with a testing regime that very quickly overwhelmed our laboratories to the extent that it was no longer even remotely able to be justified as a gold standard test because of the days it took to get a result. Why weren’t alternatives explored with urgency? What happened to the $65 million off shore saliva test programme that, to this day, has not delivered a single result, when there was a kiwi version already available. ?

Then there are the questions around the tardiness in progressing the vaccination programme, we dropped to the bottom of the supply chain, just as we did with an unacceptable delay in approving the use of RAT tests. We were one of the last country’s in the world to tick that box and it took business interests to fill that gaping hole by accessing 65 million tests in less than a fortnight for the Ministry of Health, who had missed the emails that made the initial offer.?

There are many people outside government who worked at the cliff face to try and provide answers to a government that increasingly seemed to be devoid of them.?They probably should not hold their breath in the hope their opinions might be sought over the next year and a half the Commission is going to take.?

And finally there is Three (and growing) Waters and the RNZ/TVNZ merger.

When the Labour government became the first under MMP to win complete control of the house I really believed that at last there was a party in power that would use that privilege to show the compassion, the leadership, the collaboration and the transparency that?was needed to address some of the major issues around the growing social and economic divide that was facing Aotearoa New Zealand.?Instead, transparency has disappeared, the economic and social divide has grown and the dangers of a party lead by ingrained and inflexible ideologies has come to the fore.?

And into this gap has stepped Willie Jackson and Nanaia Mahuta.?

I don’t need to highlight the concerns around the ideology driven agenda that appears to have taken control of cabinet. ?Both Ministers did that for us last week.

What the 5 Māori MPs in Cabinet (and 15 Māori MP’s in the Labour caucus) need to reflect on is the damage they are doing to those who argue that Māori have an increasingly important and constructive contribution to make to the future of Aotearoa New Zealand.?

I believe the majority of kiwi share that view, but the increasingly inflexible, we know best, we are owed this, stand some of our Māori ministers are taking have opened the doors for those who don’t.?

This is a future we can all grow together. It is a future we need to pursue, with dignity, for the benefit of our mokopuna.?

That was the Labour Party I used to know. .?

Rhys Mountfort

Director at Kiwi Investments NZ Limited

2 年

Well that about sums it up thanks Ian.

Max Rangitutia

Senior Projects and Programme Manager

2 年

https://www.vision.org.nz/ the people's party.

回复
Oonagh McGirr FRSA

Leadership and Innovation | International Education

2 年

Thank for you for the salient points you raise and the broad reflection you share, Ian Taylor . There is considerable damage to the NZ economy at a talent level too - rigid ideological positioning has effectively locked out a significant proportion of skilled global workers - much needed and culturally collaborative tangata who bring much to Aotearoa. When capability leaves, it takes time and funds to replace them...

Tony van der Lem

Tax Accountant and director VDL Accounting Services Limited

2 年

Ian I am not seeing Labour prioritising addressing the serious issues we have with poverty in NZ, it is what is not being done that concerns me most. Robertson’s fiscal update could just as easily have been delivered by a conservative government, so we don’t even need to wait till October 2023 to get conservative government

Roseanne Way

General Manager - Operations | Be Present | Live Your Potential | No Regrets

2 年

Great article Sir Ian Taylor, you have expressed the views of many, (and not just from the labour voter camp!) however it is even more of an indictment against this government, that someone with both the mana and history of party support such as yourself, feels as strongly as you do to write such an article. Leadership such as yours is called for such a time as this. I only hope the party (and nation) are listening! National would do well to be listening also, as there will certainly be no excuse for loosing at this next election.

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Ian Taylor的更多文章

  • Open Letter to James Farmer KC

    Open Letter to James Farmer KC

    James, I was interested to see your views expressed in The Herald a few days ago laying out your ‘prosecution’ case…

    17 条评论
  • Sir Bob Jones - does reading equate to wisdom.

    Sir Bob Jones - does reading equate to wisdom.

    I have recently been referred to an opinion piece written by property developer, Sir Bob Jones. I thought I would share…

    31 条评论
  • Auckland - it's time to bait the hook.

    Auckland - it's time to bait the hook.

    Just as Maui is said to have baited his magic fish hook with his own blood in order to fish up the North Island, so…

    53 条评论
  • Dear Prime Minister, you’re not measuring up to my KPIs - Sir Ian Taylor

    Dear Prime Minister, you’re not measuring up to my KPIs - Sir Ian Taylor

    The article that follows appeared in The Herald last week. I am reposting it here for those who do not have access to…

    99 条评论
  • "Lost our Mojo? - Yeah - nah!"

    "Lost our Mojo? - Yeah - nah!"

    I have been asked by a few people to post my recent article in the Herald that was addressed to the Prime Minister…

    27 条评论
  • Talanoa - let's start talking

    Talanoa - let's start talking

    Last weekend a news story on the Bluegreen Forum at Waitangi began with the opening line : "The Environmental Defence…

    10 条评论
  • Putting those 'sandflies' in context

    Putting those 'sandflies' in context

    Dear David I do have some sympathy for your views on the labels that people place on each other. Obviously, this did…

    23 条评论
  • Sir Ian Taylor: Manaaki/We Are Indigo complaint - weighing in on Auditor-General’s report into Callaghan Innovation procurement

    Sir Ian Taylor: Manaaki/We Are Indigo complaint - weighing in on Auditor-General’s report into Callaghan Innovation procurement

    On December 7 I was sent a link to the Office of the Auditor-General’s report on its “Inquiry into Callaghan…

    16 条评论
  • A Tree Is More Than Wood

    A Tree Is More Than Wood

    While I wait for my 3 year old grandson to come in and show me how to upload a multi page report I thought it might be…

  • Simon Says

    Simon Says

    I am a fan of Simon Wilson and follow his articles in The Herald with great interest. However, I woke the other day to…

    37 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了